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[rfc] Require emulator/simulator for device support #685
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asi345
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# This is the 1st commit message: simulator: implement a simulator for bitbox02 device HWI is thinking of updating its support policy such that supported wallets must implement a simulator/emulator. See bitcoin-core/HWI#685. That's why a simulator is implemented for bitbox02, supporting functionalities of its API. This first version of the simulator is capable of nearly every functionality of a normal Bitbox02 device, without promising any security or production use. Its main aim is to be able to run unit tests for features and test the API. In addition, it will be configured to run automated tests in CI, which helps both us and HWI integration. Right now, the simulator has 3 different ways to communicate with a client: giving inputs/getting output from CLI, using pipes or opening sockets. Socket is the most convenient and reliable choice in this version. It expects the clients to open a socket on port 15432, which is selected intentionally to avoid possible conflicts. The simulator resides with C unit-tests since it uses same mocks, therefore it can be built by `make unit-test`. Lastly, Python client implemented in `py/send_message.py` is updated to support communicating with simulator with the socket configuration mentioned above. Client can be started up with `./py/send_message.py --simulator` command. To run the simulator, `build-build/bin/test_simulator` command is sufficient. Signed-off-by: asi345 <[email protected]> # This is the commit message BitBoxSwiss#2: demo code how plug simulate a bitbox02 in the Py client library
asi345
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Jan 25, 2024
HWI is thinking of updating its support policy such that supported wallets must implement a simulator/emulator. See bitcoin-core/HWI#685. That's why a simulator is implemented for bitbox02, supporting functionalities of its API. This first version of the simulator is capable of nearly every functionality of a normal Bitbox02 device, without promising any security or production use. Its main aim is to be able to run unit tests for features and test the API. In addition, it will be configured to run automated tests in CI, which helps both us and HWI integration. Right now, the simulator has 3 different ways to communicate with a client: giving inputs/getting output from CLI, using pipes or opening sockets. Socket is the most convenient and reliable choice in this version. It expects the clients to open a socket on port 15432, which is selected intentionally to avoid possible conflicts. The simulator resides with C unit-tests since it uses same mocks, therefore it can be built by `make unit-test`. Lastly, Python client implemented in `py/send_message.py` is updated to support communicating with simulator with the socket configuration mentioned above. Client can be started up with `./py/send_message.py --simulator` command. To run the simulator, `build-build/bin/test_simulator` command is sufficient. Signed-off-by: asi345 <[email protected]>
asi345
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Jan 25, 2024
HWI is thinking of updating its support policy such that supported wallets must implement a simulator/emulator. See bitcoin-core/HWI#685. That's why a simulator is implemented for bitbox02, supporting functionalities of its API. This first version of the simulator is capable of nearly every functionality of a normal Bitbox02 device, without promising any security or production use. Its main aim is to be able to run unit tests for features and test the API. In addition, it will be configured to run automated tests in CI, which helps both us and HWI integration. Right now, the simulator has 3 different ways to communicate with a client: giving inputs/getting output from CLI, using pipes or opening sockets. Socket is the most convenient and reliable choice in this version. It expects the clients to open a socket on port 15432, which is selected intentionally to avoid possible conflicts. The simulator resides with C unit-tests since it uses same mocks, therefore it can be built by `make unit-test`. Lastly, Python client implemented in `py/send_message.py` is updated to support communicating with simulator with the socket configuration mentioned above. Client can be started up with `./py/send_message.py --simulator` command. To run the simulator, `build-build/bin/test_simulator` command is sufficient. Signed-off-by: asi345 <[email protected]>
asi345
added a commit
to asi345/bitbox02-firmware
that referenced
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Jan 25, 2024
HWI is thinking of updating its support policy such that supported wallets must implement a simulator/emulator. See bitcoin-core/HWI#685. That's why a simulator is implemented for bitbox02, supporting functionalities of its API. This first version of the simulator is capable of nearly every functionality of a normal Bitbox02 device, without promising any security or production use. Its main aim is to be able to run unit tests for features and test the API. In addition, it will be configured to run automated tests in CI, which helps both us and HWI integration. Right now, the simulator has 3 different ways to communicate with a client: giving inputs/getting output from CLI, using pipes or opening sockets. Socket is the most convenient and reliable choice in this version. It expects the clients to open a socket on port 15432, which is selected intentionally to avoid possible conflicts. The simulator resides with C unit-tests since it uses same mocks, therefore it can be built by `make unit-test`. Lastly, Python client implemented in `py/send_message.py` is updated to support communicating with simulator with the socket configuration mentioned above. Client can be started up with `./py/send_message.py --simulator` command. To run the simulator, `build-build/bin/test_simulator` command is sufficient. Signed-off-by: asi345 <[email protected]>
asi345
added a commit
to asi345/bitbox02-firmware
that referenced
this issue
Jan 31, 2024
HWI is thinking of updating its support policy such that supported wallets must implement a simulator/emulator. See bitcoin-core/HWI#685. That's why a simulator is implemented for bitbox02, supporting functionalities of its API. This first version of the simulator is capable of nearly every functionality of a normal Bitbox02 device, without promising any security or production use. Its main aim is to be able to run unit tests for features and test the API. In addition, it will be configured to run automated tests in CI, which helps both us and HWI integration. Right now, the simulator has 3 different ways to communicate with a client: giving inputs/getting output from CLI, using pipes or opening sockets. Socket is the most convenient and reliable choice in this version. It expects the clients to open a socket on port 15432, which is selected intentionally to avoid possible conflicts. The simulator resides with C unit-tests since it uses same mocks, therefore it can be built by `make unit-test`. Lastly, Python client implemented in `py/send_message.py` is updated to support communicating with simulator with the socket configuration mentioned above. Client can be started up with `./py/send_message.py --simulator` command. To run the simulator, `build-build/bin/test_simulator` command is sufficient. Signed-off-by: asi345 <[email protected]>
asi345
added a commit
to asi345/bitbox02-firmware
that referenced
this issue
Jan 31, 2024
HWI is thinking of updating its support policy such that supported wallets must implement a simulator/emulator. See bitcoin-core/HWI#685. That's why a simulator is implemented for bitbox02, supporting functionalities of its API. This first version of the simulator is capable of nearly every functionality of a normal Bitbox02 device, without promising any security or production use. Its main aim is to be able to run unit tests for features and test the API. In addition, it will be configured to run automated tests in CI, which helps both us and HWI integration. Right now, the simulator has 3 different ways to communicate with a client: giving inputs/getting output from CLI, using pipes or opening sockets. Socket is the most convenient and reliable choice in this version. It expects the clients to open a socket on port 15432, which is selected intentionally to avoid possible conflicts. The simulator resides with C unit-tests since it uses same mocks, therefore it can be built by `make unit-test`. Lastly, Python client implemented in `py/send_message.py` is updated to support communicating with simulator with the socket configuration mentioned above. Client can be started up with `./py/send_message.py --simulator` command. To run the simulator, `build-build/bin/test_simulator` command is sufficient. Signed-off-by: asi345 <[email protected]>
asi345
added a commit
to asi345/bitbox02-firmware
that referenced
this issue
Jan 31, 2024
HWI is thinking of updating its support policy such that supported wallets must implement a simulator/emulator. See bitcoin-core/HWI#685. That's why a simulator is implemented for bitbox02, supporting functionalities of its API. This first version of the simulator is capable of nearly every functionality of a normal Bitbox02 device, without promising any security or production use. Its main aim is to be able to run unit tests for features and test the API. In addition, it will be configured to run automated tests in CI, which helps both us and HWI integration. Right now, the simulator has 3 different ways to communicate with a client: giving inputs/getting output from CLI, using pipes or opening sockets. Socket is the most convenient and reliable choice in this version. It expects the clients to open a socket on port 15432, which is selected intentionally to avoid possible conflicts. The simulator resides with C unit-tests since it uses same mocks, therefore it can be built by `make unit-test`. Lastly, Python client implemented in `py/send_message.py` is updated to support communicating with simulator with the socket configuration mentioned above. Client can be started up with `./py/send_message.py --simulator` command. To run the simulator, `build-build/bin/test_simulator` command is sufficient. Signed-off-by: asi345 <[email protected]>
asi345
added a commit
to asi345/bitbox02-firmware
that referenced
this issue
Jan 31, 2024
HWI is thinking of updating its support policy such that supported wallets must implement a simulator/emulator. See bitcoin-core/HWI#685. That's why a simulator is implemented for bitbox02, supporting functionalities of its API. This first version of the simulator is capable of nearly every functionality of a normal Bitbox02 device, without promising any security or production use. Its main aim is to be able to run unit tests for features and test the API. In addition, it will be configured to run automated tests in CI, which helps both us and HWI integration. Right now, the simulator has 3 different ways to communicate with a client: giving inputs/getting output from CLI, using pipes or opening sockets. Socket is the most convenient and reliable choice in this version. It expects the clients to open a socket on port 15432, which is selected intentionally to avoid possible conflicts. The simulator resides with C unit-tests since it uses same mocks, therefore it can be built by `make unit-test`. Lastly, Python client implemented in `py/send_message.py` is updated to support communicating with simulator with the socket configuration mentioned above. Client can be started up with `./py/send_message.py --simulator` command. To run the simulator, `build-build/bin/test_simulator` command is sufficient. Signed-off-by: asi345 <[email protected]>
asi345
added a commit
to asi345/bitbox02-firmware
that referenced
this issue
Jan 31, 2024
HWI is thinking of updating its support policy such that supported wallets must implement a simulator/emulator. See bitcoin-core/HWI#685. That's why a simulator is implemented for bitbox02, supporting functionalities of its API. This first version of the simulator is capable of nearly every functionality of a normal Bitbox02 device, without promising any security or production use. Its main aim is to be able to run unit tests for features and test the API. In addition, it will be configured to run automated tests in CI, which helps both us and HWI integration. Right now, the simulator has 3 different ways to communicate with a client: giving inputs/getting output from CLI, using pipes or opening sockets. Socket is the most convenient and reliable choice in this version. It expects the clients to open a socket on port 15432, which is selected intentionally to avoid possible conflicts. The simulator resides with C unit-tests since it uses same mocks, therefore it can be built by `make unit-test`. Lastly, Python client implemented in `py/send_message.py` is updated to support communicating with simulator with the socket configuration mentioned above. Client can be started up with `./py/send_message.py --simulator` command. To run the simulator, `build-build/bin/test_simulator` command is sufficient. Signed-off-by: asi345 <[email protected]>
asi345
added a commit
to asi345/bitbox02-firmware
that referenced
this issue
Jan 31, 2024
HWI is thinking of updating its support policy such that supported wallets must implement a simulator/emulator. See bitcoin-core/HWI#685. That's why a simulator is implemented for bitbox02, supporting functionalities of its API. This first version of the simulator is capable of nearly every functionality of a normal Bitbox02 device, without promising any security or production use. Its main aim is to be able to run unit tests for features and test the API. In addition, it will be configured to run automated tests in CI, which helps both us and HWI integration. Right now, the simulator has 3 different ways to communicate with a client: giving inputs/getting output from CLI, using pipes or opening sockets. Socket is the most convenient and reliable choice in this version. It expects the clients to open a socket on port 15432, which is selected intentionally to avoid possible conflicts. The simulator resides with C unit-tests since it uses same mocks, therefore it can be built by `make unit-test`. Lastly, Python client implemented in `py/send_message.py` is updated to support communicating with simulator with the socket configuration mentioned above. Client can be started up with `./py/send_message.py --simulator` command. To run the simulator, `build-build/bin/test_simulator` command is sufficient. Signed-off-by: asi345 <[email protected]>
asi345
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that referenced
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Feb 1, 2024
HWI is thinking of updating its support policy such that supported wallets must implement a simulator/emulator. See bitcoin-core/HWI#685. That's why a simulator is implemented for bitbox02, supporting functionalities of its API. This first version of the simulator is capable of nearly every functionality of a normal Bitbox02 device, without promising any security or production use. Its main aim is to be able to run unit tests for features and test the API. In addition, it will be configured to run automated tests in CI, which helps both us and HWI integration. Right now, the simulator has 3 different ways to communicate with a client: giving inputs/getting output from CLI, using pipes or opening sockets. Socket is the most convenient and reliable choice in this version. It expects the clients to open a socket on port 15432, which is selected intentionally to avoid possible conflicts. The simulator resides with C unit-tests since it uses same mocks, therefore it can be built by `make unit-test`. Lastly, Python client implemented in `py/send_message.py` is updated to support communicating with simulator with the socket configuration mentioned above. Client can be started up with `./py/send_message.py --simulator` command. To run the simulator, `build-build/bin/test_simulator` command is sufficient. Signed-off-by: asi345 <[email protected]>
asi345
added a commit
to asi345/bitbox02-firmware
that referenced
this issue
Feb 7, 2024
HWI is thinking of updating its support policy such that supported wallets must implement a simulator/emulator. See bitcoin-core/HWI#685. That's why a simulator is implemented for bitbox02, supporting functionalities of its API. This first version of the simulator is capable of nearly every functionality of a normal Bitbox02 device, without promising any security or production use. Its main aim is to be able to run unit tests for features and test the API. In addition, it will be configured to run automated tests in CI, which helps both us and HWI integration. Right now, the simulator has 3 different ways to communicate with a client: giving inputs/getting output from CLI, using pipes or opening sockets. Socket is the most convenient and reliable choice in this version. It expects the clients to open a socket on port 15432, which is selected intentionally to avoid possible conflicts. The simulator resides with C unit-tests since it uses same mocks, therefore it can be built by `make unit-test`. Lastly, Python client implemented in `py/send_message.py` is updated to support communicating with simulator with the socket configuration mentioned above. Client can be started up with `./py/send_message.py --simulator` command. To run the simulator, `build-build/bin/test_simulator` command is sufficient. Signed-off-by: asi345 <[email protected]>
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The current device support policy does not require an emulator/simulator for new devices. However I think that we should change that to require that so that we can run automated tests in CI.
The only device that HWI supports that does not have an emulator or simulator is the BitBox02. Changing this policy would mean either giving a special allowance to BitBox02, or to remove support for BitBox02 until an emulator or simulator is available.
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